Global Security Blog

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Listening for Echoes in Persia
I have spent years imagining what it would feel like to walk through a place that has been at the crossroads of history for thousands of years. Iran is one of those rare countries where every turn feels like a conversation between past and present. Its...
Challenger
Forty Years After Challenger: What We Learned About Space, Risk, and Ourselves
On January 28, 1986, the Space Shuttle Challenger disintegrated 73 seconds after liftoff, killing all seven crew members. It was not a mystery, not an unforeseeable accident, and not a failure of imagination. It was a failure of decision-making under...
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The American Honor System: How an Unwritten Code Ran a Superpower, and What Happens When It Breaks
To many non-Americans, the United States looks over-legalized and under-regulated at the same time. It has a written Constitution older than most modern states, yet it often lacks explicit laws where Europeans expect them. Whole domains of political and...
The Rediscovery of America
When Genocide Travels: America, Hitler, and the Return of an Old Logic
In the book The Rediscovery of America: Native Peoples and the Unmaking of U.S. History, historian Ned Blackhawk advances an argument that is as disturbing as it is well documented: Adolf Hitler did not invent settler colonial violence from nothing. He...
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